Please select your home edition
Edition
Armstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - TOP

2015 Transatlantic Race – Day 4 overall

by Jan Harley on 3 Jul 2015
25 Privateer Farr/Cookson 50 2007 Ronald O'Hanley - 2015 Transatlantic Race Daniel Forster / NYYC
2015 Transatlantic Race – Yesterday’s second wave of starters in the Transatlantic Race have been enjoying substantially better conditions for their get-away from the US, compared to the first group that set sail last Sunday. While the latter endured a terrible first-night thanks to a combination of light winds and lumpy seas, the former have made fast progress in 15-20-knot south-westerlies.

Frontrunner among yesterday’s starters was the 100ft maxi Nomad IV, chartered for this race by Clarke Murphy, which since starting has covered almost three times the number of miles than any the first group managed over the equivalent period.

From on board Dragon, one of five Class 40s racing double-handed, Mike Hennessey reported: “It was a good first night – clear skies, full moon, a little bit of a beam sea. We got into the watch system and into the rhythm of things. All in all, it was a pretty good night.”

Overnight they, along with the rest of the fleet, were required by race rules to stay south of the Nantucket Shoals exclusion area and also had to negotiate the Traffic Separation Scheme (effectively the maritime highway for New York-bound shipping) to the south of this. Despite these determining their course, Hennessey said that he and Kyle Hubley had got straight into their night time watch system of two hours on-two hours off following their first dinner of freeze-dried Tuscan Beef Stew.

Generally the tactic for the latest starters has been to head east or southeast as quickly as possible to avoid the light airs of an area of high pressure attempting to snare them from astern. Nomad IV, on which Britain’s Mike Broughton is navigating, is taking the most extreme southerly option, more than 45° away from the great circle (i.e. the shortest course to follow). Nomad IV’s progress is being assisted by a sizable eddy in the Gulf Stream, but her goal is to repeat the move Mariette of 1915 made earlier in the week and key into the strong south-westerlies, currently some 250 miles offshore from Newport. When Nomad IV reaches these later today she will ease sheets turning her bow on course ready for a blistering run, occasionally with a welcome Gulf Stream turbo boost, towards the bottom of the Ice Exclusion Zone, south of the Grand Banks.

In comparison, Dragon is not taking such an extreme course, but Michael Hennessey said they were hoping to key into the top of a favorable eastbound eddy shortly. “But the wind has gone back a bit so there is a limit to how we deep we can go,” he warned. While the wind was around 20 knots overnight, this morning it had dropped to 10 and was backing southwest.

Meanwhile at the front of the fleet, the race’s biggest boat, the 138’ Mariette of 1915, continues to eat up the miles and this afternoon will be the first boat to pass the southwestern tip of the Ice Exclusion Zone. Far from mimicking the technique of the Volvo Ocean Race fleet when it left Newport in mid-May, where the boats all shaved the southerly limit of their ice exclusion zone, on this occasion Mariette is set to pass some 80 miles to the south of the Transatlantic Race’s equivalent. This is to stay in the same strong south-westerlies that have propelled her east at full throttle for the last 48 hours.

Astern of Mariette, Carina has moved into second, ahead of Scarlet Oyster, while another classic ocean racer, Dorade, is hanging on to their shirt tails, despite her 1930 vintage making her 39 years older than Carina.

“We are fighting to stay in the favorable Gulf Stream, but the wind has been challenging that desired course,” reported Dorade’s Captain Ben Galloway. “David Shilton described his last watch as a sail-changing marathon, with at least four changes in three hours, not including reefing and un-reefing the main. This morning it was all hands on deck for one sail change, which had a couple of us running around the deck in our underwear, getting a good drenching in 30 knots of wind.”

Thanks to being in the midst of the balmy Gulf Stream, Galloway reported that conditions below on Dorade were like a furnace, but they had finally been able to open some hatches allowing some air to circulate below. “You could almost see the heat rising out of the butterfly hatch when it opened.”

The forecast has 20-25 knot south-westerlies taking Dorade to the Ice Exclusion Zone and beyond. However, the forecast seems erratic. Yesterday the crew on the British Shipman 50, Zephyr, a few miles astern of Dorade, experienced a solid and unforecast 38 knots of wind that, in one gust, topped 50 knots.

TR 2015 Roster of Entries Starting on June 28
Aphrodite, Christopher Otorowski, Seattle, Wash./Newport, R.I., USA
Arrowhead, Steve Berlack, Franconia, N.H., USA
Carina, Rich du Moulin, Larchmont, N.Y., USA
Charisma, Constantin Claviez, Hamburg, GER
Dizzy, Paul Anstey/Craig Rastello, Melbourne, Fla., USA
Dorade, Matt Brooks, San Francisco, Calif., USA
Jaqueline IV, Robert Forman, Bay Shore, N.Y., USA
Kiva, Mark Stevens, New Castle, N.H., USA
Mariette of 1915, Charlie Wroe, Falmouth, GBR
Scarlet Oyster, Ross Applebey, GBR
Shearwater, Dan and Gretchen Biemesderfer, Guilford, Conn., USA
Solution, Carter Bacon, Hyannis Port, Mass., USA
Zephyr, Micky St. Aldwyn, Lymington, GBR






Selden 2020 - FOOTERDoyle_SailWorld_728X90px-04 BOTTOMZhik 2024 March - FOOTER

Related Articles

UpWind by MerConcept announces 7 female athletes
For the inaugural season of Ocean Fifty Racing After four days of physical and mental tests, individual interviews, and on-water racing, seven female athletes have been selected to join the very first UpWind by MerConcept racing team.
Posted today at 1:43 pm
Last Chance for 2024 Olympic Qualification
Starting this weekend at the Semaine Olympique Française The Last Chance Regatta, held during the 55th edition of Semaine Olympique Française (Franch Olympic Week) from 20-27 April in Hyères, France, is as it says – the last chance.
Posted today at 5:42 am
35th Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta Day 1
Easy start to an exciting week The 35th Antigua Classic Yacht Regatta got off to a slow start today with unusual calm southerly winds which prompted the race committee to shorten the Old Road course.
Posted today at 3:49 am
5.5 Metre Alpen Cup at Fraglia Vela Riva Day 1
Cold start but hot racing on Lake Garda, Italy The Jean Genie (GBR 43, Peter Morton, Andrew Palfrey, Ruairidh Scott) won two out of three races on the opening day of the 2024 5.5 Metre Alpen Cup, on Thursday, which is being hosted by the first time by Fraglia Vela Riva.
Posted on 18 Apr
Melges 24 European Series kick-off 12th edition
All set in Trieste, a city with a rich sailing heritage and home to Italy's largest Melges 24 fleet The wait is over, and the first warning signal of the Melges 24 European Sailing Series 2024 will be given in Trieste, Italy, at noon on Friday, April 19.
Posted on 18 Apr
New and familiar faces set for 2024 Resolute Cup
There's no set formula for evaluating the entry list for an invitational event There's no set formula for evaluating the entry list for an invitational event. But among the critical criteria would be a healthy number of former champions, geographic diversity and a handful of new entries.
Posted on 18 Apr
First six OGR finishers all Whitbread veterans
Whitbread yacht Outlaw AU (08) crosses the finish line at 13:39 UTC to claim the Adelaide Cup Former Whitbread yacht Outlaw AU (08) crosses the Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes finish line at 13:39 UTC, 18th April after 43 days at sea ranking 6th in line honours and IRC for Leg 4.
Posted on 18 Apr
76th N2E Yacht Race - One week to go
Newcomers and veterans make N2E a sailing institution The 76th Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race will depart from its multi-line start. A multitude of racers and 145 boats that keep N2E a Southern California yacht racing favorite, will take to the 125mn course bound for the Hotel Coral and Marina.
Posted on 18 Apr
Clipper Race fleet set to arrive in Seattle
After taking on the North Pacific Ocean Over 170 non-professional sailors, including 25 Americans, are on board a fleet of eleven Clipper Race yachts currently battling it out in a race across the world's biggest ocean and heading for the Finish Line in Seattle.
Posted on 18 Apr
Alegre leads the search for every small gain
Going into 2024 52 Super Series season The first of the two new Botin Partners designed TP52s to be built for this 52 Super Series season, Andy Soriano's Alegre, is on course to make its racing debut at 52 Super Series Palma Vela Sailing Week.
Posted on 18 Apr